The Manhattan Puzzle

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The Manhattan Puzzle Page 1

by Laurence O'Bryan




  LAURENCE O’BRYAN

  The Manhattan Puzzle

  ‘Men’s evil manners live in brass; their virtues we write in water.’

  Henry VIII, Act 4, Sc. 2, William Shakespeare

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Epigraph

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Chapter 72

  Chapter 73

  Chapter 74

  Chapter 75

  Chapter 76

  Chapter 77

  Chapter 78

  Chapter 79

  Chapter 80

  Chapter 81

  Chapter 82

  Chapter 83

  Chapter 84

  Chapter 85

  Chapter 86

  Epilogue

  The Manhattan that I Love

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  By the same author

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  1

  ‘Go for it. The rougher the better, girl.’ The man had a black silk blindfold tied around his head. He spoke slowly, his voice thick with desire.

  Xena went to the door and unlocked it.

  ‘What’s that? Getting your toys out? Wow, this is even better than you promised.’

  Lord Bidoner walked into the panic room. He closed the door behind him and pressed the button to turn on the air management system. The scrubber in the roof could remove the smoke from a blazing fire and turn the output into a vapour trail.

  The man, spread-eagled and handcuffed to the stainless steel bed frame, had an expectant smile on his face.

  ‘Go on, do it,’ he said.

  The navy Calvin Klein silk suit hanging from the stool beside the bed gave an indication of who he was. Lord Bidoner examined the man’s wallet. His bank ID card, a credit-card-sized piece of aluminium with an embedded proximity chip and his family name, Hare, embossed on it, confirmed what they already knew.

  The head of global security at BXH, one of the world’s few truly global banks, was lying face-up and naked in front of him.

  ‘Don’t keep me waiting, girl.’

  ‘I won’t,’ purred Xena. She stroked his leg, then his inner thigh. He quivered in anticipation.

  The man’s wife would surely appreciate photographs of this event, but Lord Bidoner had more pressing concerns.

  He nodded at Xena.

  She was dressed in a low-cut skin-tight black catsuit that fitted her thin frame perfectly. The man laid out in front of them was expecting something memorable from the woman he’d met in the champagne bar opposite Grand Central, two weeks before. Xena’s story, about being an Ethiopian diplomat’s daughter, and her eager smile, had captivated him.

  She ran her finger down the man’s stomach. It trembled under her touch.

  ‘Don’t stop, honey. Don’t stop.’

  With her other hand Xena clicked on the silver Turboflame blowtorch, the most expensive model in the world with its 1500C flame. She held the gently hissing blue, inch-long flame up and watched it glow brighter as her fingers moved slowly down his stomach.

  ‘What’s that?’ he said.

  She didn’t reply.

  Hare’s voice was still confident when he spoke. ‘Was that your sister who just came in? Is she gonna join us?’

  ‘We have a surprise for you,’ said Xena.

  The man pulled on the handcuffs, which began to cut into his skin. It had taken a bit of persuasion, since this was their third meeting, for Xena to get him to go this far, but he trusted her now. And he’d made it clear that he wasn’t going to put up with any crap. He’d break the bed if she didn’t release him when he gave the password.

  She’d smiled, hugged him and agreed.

  They’d even laughed about making a written contract.

  ‘What’s the surprise?’ He shook the bed, testing its resilience and the strength of the handcuffs. He’d assumed they were easily breakable toys, like a previous pair she’d shown him. But he was wrong.

  And he didn’t know that the bed was bolted to the reinforced slab of the panic room floor, either. Though he might have guessed that there was something wrong when it refused to move under him.

  ‘Just a friend of mine. We have a little question for you,’ said Xena.

  ‘Yeah?’ He was still curious, still expectant of further delights.

  ‘What is the password for the security system at BXH?’

  The man didn’t reply verbally. He shook the bed from side to side, trying to break free. He didn’t know that his only hope was if his thrashing managed to separate his hands from his wrists, and his feet from his ankles. And very few people have strength enough to do that.

  Xena waved the blue flame, raised it, as if offering it up. It flickered higher.

  The odour of the burning butane gas filled the room like bad perfume. The sound of the blow torch was a threatening hissing now. Xena placed the tip of the flame against the top edge of the whiskey tumbler the man had been drinking from. The glass turned blue.

  ‘Wait until you feel this. Then you will tell me,’ said Xena. Her tone had changed. It was demanding now.

  ‘What? Fu …’ The end of that confident word was bitten off by the piercing scream that came from deep within his throat. Xena had touched the flame against the pale skin of his shoulder.

  He began thrashing. Like a fish flailing. He moved from side to side, squirming away from the skin-blistering heat. But he couldn’t move fast enough. And his legs and arms were stretched out tight.

  Easy targets.

  The smell in the room changed and the atmosphere with it. Pain and whimpering, sizzling and guttural roars filled the air.

  The man had become a dog.

  Then Xena asked him again.

  ‘The password, please.’ She spoke softly, as if they were still playing a game.

 
; ‘If you give it up, I will release you. You can explain these little burns to your wife. But the ones I will inflict next will require hospital treatment. Or the services of a morgue.’ She clicked the flame off, then pressed the hot tip hard and fast into the biggest blister she had inflicted, near his ankle.

  ‘What do you say, Mr Hare?’

  The man answered with a defiant, animal roar. He shook the bed under him. The last vestige of his pride in working at BXH bellowed out of him.

  Xena lit the flame again. She reached forward, touched it to his chest, and ran it fast down the middle until smoke from his burning body hair filled the room with a sickly odour.

  ‘Stop, stop!’ he screamed. His body squirmed to escape the heat.

  ‘It’s #89*99,’ he shouted. ‘Please! Stop!’

  Bidoner keyed the password into his phone and pressed send.

  ‘I hope you’re not lying,’ said Xena. ‘I want all this to have a happy ending.’

  She squeezed his thigh with her hand, then stroked it.

  Tears streamed from under his blindfold. His cheeks were red. It was good he couldn’t see the weals on his body, because he would know immediately that he wouldn’t be able to explain any of them to his wife.

  ‘Please, let me go. I promise not to tell anyone. I swear, on my children’s lives.’

  Lord Bidoner’s mobile beeped as an incoming message came in. He nodded at Xena. The code had worked.

  ‘I believe you,’ she said. ‘But there is one more thing I must do for you.’

  She put the Turboflame down and went to the fridge. She took out a six-inch-long serrated knife, honed with care to a perfect blade, from the freezer section.

  She held it in the air, admiring its cold edge.

  ‘Now you will find release,’ she said.

  The man’s body went still. His toes, which had scrunched up, half straightened. The only sound was his pain-filled whimpering.

  The panic room in the apartment on Fifth Avenue, overlooking the skyscrapers of Manhattan, was soundproof. It was why they used the room.

  Xena flicked the blade across the man’s pale skin, once, then twice, fascinated by how quickly blood gushed, how fast it flowed from a few simple cuts.

  ‘This is for my brothers,’ she said.

  ‘Don’t,’ he whimpered. Fear trembled in his voice. ‘I have two children, a wife.’

  She growled, psyching herself up.

  ‘Prima quattuor invocare unum,’ she said, as she grabbed him, jerking him upwards and castrating him with one swinging motion.

  She held the bloody remains up in the air.

  His screams of terror and pain vibrated through the room as blood spurted two feet high. A foul smell followed and the man’s words became a babbling.

  Lord Bidoner held his nose. He’d seen enough. He went out to the main room of the apartment, with its view towards the glittering Jazz-era spire of the Empire State Building.

  ‘You did good, my dear. The first offering has been done correctly,’ he said, when Xena joined him.

  She was panting.

  ‘Come here.’

  He pushed her up against the inch-thick glass of the window, as Manhattan glittered behind them.

  Afterwards, he handed her a balloon glass containing a large shot of Asbach 21. She sipped the brandy, then downed it in one gulp.

  Then she lay down on the sleek oak coffee table that dominated the room. The canyon of lights stretching into the velvet Manhattan night reflected all the way along the length of the table and onto her ebony skin.

  He reached down and stroked her shoulder. It was trembling.

  ‘Three more before the moon rises again. That is what the book says. That is what we will do.’

  She smiled up at him. Her white teeth shone as she leaned her head back and stretched.

  2

  A creak rang out against the muffled noise of night-time London.

  ‘Sean?’ Isabel’s voice echoed. Her head was off the pillow. Was that a shadow moving? The moment of deep pleasure at sensing his return was replaced in a second by fear, as no response came.

  She slid out of bed. Alek, who was now four, was in the next room. If that was Sean out there, playing some game, she was going to make him pay. Big time. She’d just finished one of the most demanding projects she had worked on during her time as an IT security consultant, and her brain had been fried to mush. She needed sleep.

  She stood in the doorway.

  There was no one on the landing.

  She peered downstairs. The house felt deserted. The heating had been off for hours. She went into Alek’s room, checked his breathing and tucked him in.

  Was this going to be a replay of that night a few weeks ago when he didn’t come home? The thought made her shudder. In all the time she’d known him he’d never done anything like what he’d done that night.

  She remembered the creak that had woken her. What had that been about?

  Had she imagined it? Her dreams had been strange recently. Images from Istanbul and Jerusalem came too often. Maybe that was what had roused her.

  She went downstairs and turned on all the lights. Nothing was out of place, though there was an odd smell. A lemony tang, as if a cleaner had passed through. She stood near the front door. This was all Sean’s fault. She picked up the telephone and pressed redial. The call went to voicemail, again.

  She slammed the phone down.

  Bastard.

  Stop it. He’ll be home soon.

  She turned out the lights, headed back to bed, and tried to sleep. The icy wind buffeting the window didn’t help. Neither did the cold space where Sean’s freckled body should have been.

  The matchbook-thin Bang & Olufsen docking system said it was five past three. How many years do you get these days if you murder your husband?

  She lay there, seething, angry not only with Sean, but with the idiots at BXH too. And with whoever had decided to hold their stupid celebration the night before. It was bad enough that they demanded he work long hours, couldn’t they at least let him come home?

  When she woke again after a disturbed sleep, London rumbled even louder. It was ten to eight. Her first thought was that he’d come back, and had already gotten up. He usually woke before she did. He could be down in the kitchen making toast with that new poppyseed bread.

  He’d stick his jaw out when she asked him what time he’d come in, then run a hand through his thick brown hair and give her that blue-eyed innocent look, his secret weapon ever since she’d met him in Istanbul.

  She turned.

  His side of the bed was unruffled. A prickling sensation ran over her skin.

  She picked up her phone, pressed his number. He’d better have a good explanation. A very good explanation.

  The call went to voicemail. She wasn’t going to leave another message.

  Her stomach tightened. She felt sick. Where was he?

  Her life was not supposed to be like this. She was too young for all this crap. They’d gone through a lot when they’d first met, that watery tunnel in Istanbul, that hellhole in Israel, but all that was long behind them. Their life was peaceful now, family oriented.

  So what about that last time he hadn’t come home?

  It hadn’t been that long ago. Three weeks, to be precise. That had been a Thursday night too. He’d come home for breakfast, pleading for forgiveness, with that elaborate excuse on his lips. What had it been? Oh yes, a planning meeting that had gone on too long.

  Did he think the bank’s mega-merger finally being completed would be enough to placate her? How could a celebration dinner, drinks, explain this? He wasn’t even a full-time employee there, he was a consultant, working for the Institute of Applied Research on a project that had already eaten up a year of his life.

  She breathed in, told herself to calm down.

  Someone would have called her if anything had happened.

  He was late. That was it. That was all.

  The same as last time. And
she would make him pay properly this time. She listened for the soft click of the front door opening. He wasn’t going to let her down. Sean didn’t do things like that. They were going to Paris later that day. They were going to be soaping each other in a pink marble bath at the Franklin Roosevelt Hotel, just off the Champs-Élysées, before midnight.

  That was his plan.

  Everything was ready.

  Since his uncle and aunt had invited them to stay in the hotel with them while they were visiting Paris, she’d been counting the days. And Sean knew it.

  The trip was just what they needed. And such a great gesture from his uncle and aunt. They were the only people from Sean’s family that she really got on with. They’d insisted Sean find someone to look after Alek. The Louvre and the Opera House weren’t ideal places for a four-year-old, never mind one with a hyperactive streak. They deserved this weekend.

  And they were booked into the hotel’s honeymoon suite. Tonight they’d be sleeping in a Louis XIV four-poster under a canopy of mauve silk. It was going to happen. No one was going to take it away from her.

  Not even Sean Ryan.

  3

  The girl’s head rolled from side to side. There was no turning back now. The effects of Rohypnol wear off after a few hours.

  He had work to do.

  He ran his hands over her naked body. She winced as he pushed her legs apart, but didn’t wake. Looking at her splayed out made him want her properly this time. But he stopped himself.

  He couldn’t afford for his DNA to be found.

  He knelt.

  The blade made a sighing noise as it cut through the air. There was a spasm of wet jerking as skin, muscle and artery were cut.

  Even then she didn’t wake. The blood began to flow like paint cans tipped over, and as it did the shaking in his body slowed, then stopped, as if the flames of a fever were easing.

  He was glad he’d done it quickly. The next job he had to do would be messy.

  4

  Isabel closed her eyes, willing herself to be calm.

  They were going to have a wonderful weekend. Romantically speaking, the Franklin Roosevelt Hotel was about a million miles from Fulham, from working every spare minute helping people to find endless lost or deleted files on their computers and making sure Alek was dressed and fed and not wasting his life watching too much TV. And looking after Sean too, when he came home. She listened, and willed a faint noise to be the front door opening. She waited for him to bound up the stairs, for her life to go back to normal.

 

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